Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yuck. I would hate to have my "next door neighbor" be a swimming pool. Really.
It sure beats having a 3 story house towering over your charming rambler.
Anonymous wrote:I don't see how the pool would be .5 million. Unless this small lot house is in Franklin Park, Ballantrae, Langley Farms, near the Chain Bridge [not in a development] I think the project is a WASTE of money.
Move onto another house OR if possible carve out a small portion of the second lot, fix up that house and sell it. That also is only worthwhile in specific locations.
Anonymous wrote:Yuck. I would hate to have my "next door neighbor" be a swimming pool. Really.
Anonymous wrote:Yuck. I would hate to have my "next door neighbor" be a swimming pool. Really.
Anonymous wrote:You are gong to have to get permits out the wazoo. Your neighbors may hold up the hearings. You will have to submit plans. The County has all sorts of rules about what can and cannot be built. Run it all by the County before you purchase the house. Also, the actually process of tearing down is much more difficult and expensive than you would think. You have to haul all that debris off sit and pay to have it properly dumpled. You cannot use it for fill for the basement. The plans that you submit will require that you have a specified-height fence surrounding the pool so children can't get it it, unless permanent cover (that rule keeps changing). We have two lots and pay two separate property tax bill
Anonymous wrote:We are thinking about buying the neighbor's house directly behind our house because we have a small backyard. What we would like to do is tear it down and have a large backyard and pool.
Has anyone done this?
As long as we aren't building our house bigger past the property line there shouldn't be an issue right?
This is in fairfax county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are thinking about buying the neighbor's house directly behind our house because we have a small backyard. What we would like to do is tear it down and have a large backyard and pool.
Has anyone done this?
As long as we aren't building our house bigger past the property line there shouldn't be an issue right?
This is in fairfax county.
Odds are your DH is going to get a better job offer and you'll haul ass back to Jersey or New York or wherever. Do us all a favor and leave the neighborhood as you found it, this is actually home for some of us and we'd rather not have to look at your whim for the next 30 years.
I am op and have lived in fairfax all my life, I don't have any connections to new york or jersey. Thanks for trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are thinking about buying the neighbor's house directly behind our house because we have a small backyard. What we would like to do is tear it down and have a large backyard and pool.
Has anyone done this?
As long as we aren't building our house bigger past the property line there shouldn't be an issue right?
This is in fairfax county.
Odds are your DH is going to get a better job offer and you'll haul ass back to Jersey or New York or wherever. Do us all a favor and leave the neighborhood as you found it, this is actually home for some of us and we'd rather not have to look at your whim for the next 30 years.
Anonymous wrote:Odds are your DH is going to get a better job offer and you'll haul ass back to Jersey or New York or wherever. Do us all a favor and leave the neighborhood as you found it, this is actually home for some of us and we'd rather not have to look at your whim for the next 30 years.